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March 12, 1918, the Austro-German troops captured Chernihiv and the town returned under the authority of the government of the Ukrainian People’s Republic.

January 12, 1919, the town was taken by the Bolsheviks.

Chernihiv was one of the largest towns of Kievan Rus.

In the first third of the 16th century, the town fortress had 27 guns, its garrison numbered about 1,000 people.

In 1618, according to the Deulin Treaty, Chernihiv became part of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth.

After the February Revolution of 1917, detachments of the Free Cossacks were created in Chernihiv, and power was transferred to the Ukrainian Central Rada.

February 1, 1918, Soviet power was proclaimed in the town.

Chernihiv (Chernigov in Russian) is a city and administrative center of the Chernihiv region of Ukraine, standing on the Desna River, northeast of Kyiv.

It is the most northern regional center of Ukraine.

After the Russian-Lithuanian war (1500-1503), Chernihiv became part of the Russian state.

Since Lithuania was not going to put up with the loss of this region, Chernihiv was constantly becoming the object of Lithuanian military campaigns that occurred during numerous Russian-Lithuanian wars.

At the end of the 9th century, it joined Kievan Rus. In the second half of the 11th century, the growth of the town continued.

For the first time Chernihiv was mentioned in the Tale of Bygone Years in 907, when the Kiev prince Oleg, after a successful campaign against Byzantium, obliged the Greeks to pay tribute to the largest towns of Kievan Rus. In the 12th-13th centuries, during the fragmentation of Rus, the ancient Chernihiv, being the center of a separate Chernihiv princedom, reached its peak.

A lot of residents of Chernihiv took part in the liquidation of the consequences of the accident. The cathedral was built in the 12th century on the foundation of an older stone structure of the 11th century. It is one of the most beautiful buildings in the city. This building is an example of the architecture of the Neo-Russian style that was popular at the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. Also there are 12 cast-iron bastion cannons of the 17th century, which are considered one of the symbols of Chernihiv. It is one of the largest ancient Russian burial mounds dating back to the 9th-10th centuries.